Lloyd’s today announced a loss of £0.4bn (pre-tax) for the first six months of 2020, driven by £2.4bn in COVID-19 losses contributing 18.7% to the market’s combined ratio of 110.4%. Excluding COVID-19 claims, the market’s combined ratio has shown substantial improvement at 91.7%, down from 98.8% in H1 2019.
The key figures reported in Lloyd’s 2020 Half Year Results are:
- Aggregated market loss of £0.4bn (June 2019: profit of £2.3bn)
- Gross written premiums of £20.0bn (June 2019: £19.7bn)
- Net investment income of £0.9bn, 1.2% return (June 2019: £2.3bn, 3.2% return)
- Combined ratio of 110.4% (June 2019: 98.8%)
- Net resources of £32.8bn (December 2019: £30.6bn)
- Central solvency ratio of 250% (December 2019: 238%)
Excluding COVID-19 losses, the market delivered an underwriting profit of £1.0bn, demonstrating a significant improvement in Lloyd’s underlying performance. This is supported by 7.1 percentage point improvement in the attritional loss ratio which has dropped to 52.6% in the first six months of 2020 (H1 2019: 59.7%), with prior year development remaining stable at 0.5% (H1 2019: 0.4%).
Gross written premiums of £20.0bn represent a 1.7% increase over the same period in 2019. However, eliminating foreign exchange rate movements, overall premium increased by just 0.1%. Positive rate momentum accelerated in the first six months of 2020, with the market achieving average risk adjusted rate increases on renewal business of 8.7%. This was offset by a 8.6% decrease in business volumes across the market, reflecting the market’s focus on the quality of the business it renews and underwrites.
The H1 2020 expense ratio dropped marginally from 38.1% to 37.7%, with the Future at Lloyd’s programme central to tackling total acquisition costs and administration expenses.
In the first six months of 2020, the market’s net resources increased by 7.2% to £32.8bn as at 30 June 2020 (FY 2019: £30.6bn), reinforcing the exceptional strength of Lloyd’s balance sheet with a central solvency ratio of 250%.